Rolling Classical 2021

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Anderszewski’s disc of WTC sélections is indeed worth your while, as are all of his other recordings (many of which are devoted to Bach).

And yes, that piece is most welcome. Blomstedt 4evah!

pomenitul, Tuesday, 24 August 2021 14:53 (two years ago) link

Finally found some uninterrupted time to listen to Moult today. It's quite something. Haven't broken much down but the timbres and textures are interesting and pleasing and it all feels like it flows intuitively or at the least constructs an ambient space, despite the relative lack of pitched material. Beguiling atmospheres in the titular composition.

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Friday, 27 August 2021 02:54 (two years ago) link

The Anderszewski Bach disc is the excerpts from WTC2? I've been listening to that on NML. It was sounding great today, all the lines and thematic material very clear and the recording itself very pleasant.

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 29 August 2021 14:26 (two years ago) link

Yes, that’s the one. Glad you liked the Iannotta btw.

pomenitul, Sunday, 29 August 2021 14:52 (two years ago) link

I somehow just noticed that the finale of Haydn's Piano Sonata in G Major, Hob. XVI/G1, and the first movement of the G major Sonata or Divertimento Hob. XVI/11 are exactly the same.

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Wednesday, 1 September 2021 11:29 (two years ago) link

https://yarnwire.bandcamp.com/album/tonband

Have you ever experienced sound melting through your headphones? Maybe you’ve heard real-time spectral disintegration of an air raid siren? What about purposeful deformation of the natural order of sound itself?

that's almost exactly what I wuz thinking! I do like this new Yarn/Wire recording though. They've also played on the new Annea Lockwood release that came out yesterday as well.

calzino, Saturday, 11 September 2021 11:07 (two years ago) link

^^^

the opening two piano/percussion pieces on this are fucking immense imo

calzino, Monday, 13 September 2021 10:04 (two years ago) link

Long concert by Emmanuel Jacob Lacopo (DMA student at McGill) from yesterday with a lot of interesting material. A mix of classical guitar and electric guitar + fixed media, with pieces by Florence Price, Meredith Monk (five pieces I think), Thomas Flippin, Ulysses Kay, Shelley Washington, Tania Léon.
https://fb.watch/8guIxqFwc7/

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 26 September 2021 18:54 (two years ago) link

This album of solo piano pieces by Nordic composers, played by Ieva Jokubaviciute (d/k how to pronounce that), could be an aoty contender. Really hits the right intersection point of compositional integrity, approachability, and complexity and progressivism: https://sonoluminuslabel.bandcamp.com/album/northscapes

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Saturday, 2 October 2021 16:41 (two years ago) link

https://yarnwire.bandcamp.com/album/tonband

The sample track - the first movement of Poppe's Feld - is fantastic! Great colours and energy.

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 3 October 2021 02:01 (two years ago) link

This is pretty cool, a string quartet by Vijay Iyer meant to be played attacca after an unfinished fragment by Mozart, that takes the final motif as its starting point:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LPOPQEJacY

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Monday, 11 October 2021 02:43 (two years ago) link

https://anothertimbre.bandcamp.com/album/ballad

some new (old) Linda Catlin-Smith that I rather like.

calzino, Monday, 11 October 2021 13:22 (two years ago) link

“We’ve never dated before, but I wrote you this symphony about my vivid fantasies of our love and lust, how I drugged myself and dreamed I killed you, and how you then joined me in a diabolical witch orgy. Want to go out?” 🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩

— Dr. Annika Socolofsky 🏳️‍🌈 (@aksocolofsky) October 16, 2021

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 17 October 2021 02:26 (two years ago) link

Lol. Never liked the Symphonie Fantastique but not necessarily because of the story.

Typo? Negative! (Boring, Maryland), Sunday, 17 October 2021 02:46 (two years ago) link

I probably am most likely to listen to Liszt’s solo piano arrangement of the fantastique these days tbh

Berlioz was genuinely nuts

covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Monday, 18 October 2021 20:47 (two years ago) link

Listened to a ton of his live recordings today (live is where he really excelled IMO)

covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Saturday, 23 October 2021 00:25 (two years ago) link

Very much contemporary, and not for everyone, but I just purchased and am listening to this for the first time and it is immense, expansive, and sort of frightening in a Deep Listening way. Like if Oliveros listened to black metal. two double bassists, one electric and one acoustic. Really intense and beautiful! I really love it.

https://sonoluminuslabel.bandcamp.com/album/caeli

I'm a sovereign jizz citizen (the table is the table), Tuesday, 26 October 2021 20:23 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

I finally listened to the whole thing. I really like the sound, and it is really satisfying in doses, but I'm not sure I need over 2h of it, as there's not much variety. (Maybe it needs to be heard in higher quality?) What's going on compositionally? It mostly feels improvised to me.

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 14 November 2021 16:10 (two years ago) link

Fantastic album of contemporary piano music, often with preparations or extended techniques: https://newfocusrecordings.bandcamp.com/album/kerm-s

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Monday, 15 November 2021 19:41 (two years ago) link

Sund4r, I'm not totally certain, but it does seem like Caeli is mostly improvisatory. Both musicians involved also have their feet in the jazz world, so I think there's some overlap.

I do think that it has its repetitive side, but I treat it more as a drone or deep listening record to be left on, with my focus moving in and out as I please/am able.

I'm a sovereign jizz citizen (the table is the table), Monday, 15 November 2021 20:10 (two years ago) link

Listening to Gregson's "Patina" right now. It's lovely, a bit mannered, but wow these strings are richer than butter. Enjoying it.

I'm a sovereign jizz citizen (the table is the table), Monday, 15 November 2021 20:11 (two years ago) link

Makes sense, in many ways, but the Gregson record reminds me a bit of Jon Hopkins. It's beautifully composed and arranged and recorded, but almost feels a little *too* on the nose. Which can sometimes be a great balm, to be honest.

I'm a sovereign jizz citizen (the table is the table), Monday, 15 November 2021 20:51 (two years ago) link

New Emily Shaw album is great classical guitar, all pieces by women composers, ranging from new microtonal fretless guitar music by Amy Brandon to a transcription of Baroque keyboard music by Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre, with idiomatically appropriate improvisation: https://open.spotify.com/album/5a96ZYU8ChI5oiLvN41aDa?si=EA0S3vhZQ8CDAIrL4sYC3g

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Tuesday, 16 November 2021 19:39 (two years ago) link

That makes sense re Caeli btw, table.

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Tuesday, 16 November 2021 19:40 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

https://wildup.bandcamp.com/album/julius-eastman-vol-1-femenine

the first of a 7 volume Julius Eastman anthology performed by the Wild Up collective.

calzino, Sunday, 5 December 2021 11:34 (two years ago) link

beautiful

let's make lunch and listen to five finger death punch (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 5 December 2021 11:57 (two years ago) link

it's a stunner!

calzino, Sunday, 5 December 2021 12:02 (two years ago) link

This is just the thing.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Sunday, 5 December 2021 13:04 (two years ago) link

I was at a live performance of Femenine by Wild Up and it was a high pint of my life no exaggeration. By then end I felt elated and cleansed and was in tears. The picture on the record cover is apropos.

A Pile of Ants (Boring, Maryland), Sunday, 5 December 2021 19:22 (two years ago) link

This piece is hilarious:

Meet the Pianist Revolutionizing Classical Music
The radical artistry of Key Playerson
by Sharon Su

Offstage, wearing ironed jeans, polished dress shoes, and a dark blazer, Key Playerson looks more like a regular Joe than a new talent changing the world of classical music. Earlier this year, Playerson sent shockwaves through the industry when he famously swept the Queen Elsa International Piano Competition. He not only won every prize in every category, he also inspired the judges to revoke the medals of every previous champion who ever competed. When I mention this, Playerson laughs it off—refreshingly down to earth, he quickly sets the record straight on his reputation as a wunderkind.

“I wasn’t a prodigy,” he insists, curling his award-winning fingers around his latte. “I started playing piano at age three, like everyone else, and didn’t win a major competition until I was 12. I’ve always thought of myself as a late bloomer, really.”

Although Playerson was born with a natural ear, picking out the harmonies of Mahler’s symphonies on his family’s Steinway D, he’s not from a family of musicians. His parents, a professor of neurolinguistics and a practicing oncologist, are amateur lovers of classical music; in their spare time, they run the New Bramble Music Festival, currently in its 30th season. (This festival’s residencies this summer include Stephen Isserlis, Mitsuko Uchida, and Jonathan Biss.) With some coaxing from me, Playerson starts sharing intimate musical memories from his childhood.

“When I was five, I had this cassette tape of Maurizio Pollini playing Beethoven’s ‘Emperor’ with the Vienna Philharmonic,” he says, “and the first time I heard that first E-flat major chord in the piano…wow. I kept rewinding the tape just to hear that E-flat major chord, and I’d do it for hours, rewinding and replaying, ‘til I wore the tape out. I didn’t even know there was a second theme until I was seven,” he chuckles. (Such is Playerson’s modesty and down-to-earth charm that he doesn’t even mention that Pollini, an old family friend, is his godfather.)

Soon after, Playerson started lessons with the neighborhood piano teacher, Pedha Gough. I asked Gough for her thoughts on her pupil. “Key is a bright, singular talent—you don’t get that level of excellence very often in a generation,” says Gough, whose students include every winner of the Chopin and Tchaikovsky competitions of the last six years and last year’s Grammy winner for Best Solo Classical Album.

Despite his childhood seeped in classical music, Playerson is refreshingly fluent in current pop culture. In the course of our conversation, he compares Franz Liszt’s star power to that of the Beatles. I’m taken aback, but then realize that I shouldn’t be surprised that Playerson has heard of the Beatles; he’s a self-professed voracious user of the internet. Later in the conversation he mentions Audrey Hepburn, and I don’t even bat an eye.

At one point, I have to ask the question on everyone’s mind: As an emerging artist with barely any accolades to his name, how does he plan on charting his nascent career? Playerson—who is a Deutsche Grammophon exclusive artist, has soloed with the New York Philharmonic, the Cleveland Orchestra, and the Philadelphia Orchestra; substituted last minute for Jean-Yves Thibaudet to resounding acclaim; and headlined Ravinia and Aspen in the same year—looks thoughtful as he ponders the question.

“I think the key to starting out is playing music that you love and care about, not just the music everyone expects you to play,” he confides. “Like, everyone wants to hear me play Gershwin’s ‘Rhapsody in Blue,’ but I want to branch out, challenge the status quo. If you always give people what they want, then you establish yourself as someone who just follows in the footsteps of others. The New York Philharmonic tried to book me for ‘Rhapsody in Blue’ and I held firm. I said, ‘I’m not doing that. I’m going to do Gershwin’s Concerto in F.’”

In fact, Playerson has developed a reputation for unabashedly speaking his mind. In 2019, he sent music lovers reeling when he expressed his support for gay marriage. He is unafraid to weigh in on other controversial political topics too; late one night, at 8 p.m., he took to Twitter to share his belief that Abraham Lincoln signing the Emancipation Proclamation was, on the whole, a good thing.

“I just feel a duty to set the record straight,” he says, the faintest note of exasperation in his voice betraying his impatience. “I mean, classical music is a universal language; from the music of 18th century Austria to the music of 19th century Germany, it represents the entirety of what human civilization has to offer. No one who’s studied or appreciated classical music has ever gone on to oppress or hurt other people.”

With his powerful moral convictions and modern sensibilities, it’s no wonder Playerson is so appealing to a hip new generation of classical music listeners. I ask him what he plans on doing next.

He smiles shyly, pushing his empty latte cup across the table before he answers. “I’d really love to shine a light on underrated music,” he says finally, with the same coy vulnerability that the New York Times praised in his Carnegie Hall debut. “I’m working on learning all of Beethoven’s 32 sonatas; they’re criminally underplayed. The ‘Hammerklavier’ is such a diamond in the rough, for example. And Beethoven was such a passionate yet difficult man, I really identify with him. I’m hoping to eventually record them all.”

It’s a bold, innovative undertaking, but I have no doubt that Key Playerson can pull it off.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 16 December 2021 21:44 (two years ago) link

Very funny

Also

Pretty much every single idea/fake quote in it is cribbed from an actual profile/interview/memoir of a Great Musician, it did not require much imagination on my part

— 🎹 Sharon Su 🎹 (@doodlyroses) December 16, 2021

flamboyant goon tie included, Thursday, 16 December 2021 22:08 (two years ago) link

Very good recent contemporary classical guitar album: https://danielramjattan.bandcamp.com/album/inspirations-new-music-for-solo-guitar

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Tuesday, 21 December 2021 02:22 (two years ago) link

Thanks. I'm listening to the nooon concert at Laurier now, and it has been interesting. It must have a great music faculty.

youn, Tuesday, 21 December 2021 04:36 (two years ago) link

Cool, this one?:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9w7-4e2stYs

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Tuesday, 21 December 2021 14:48 (two years ago) link

Oh nice, he's doing the Chaconne!

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Tuesday, 21 December 2021 17:32 (two years ago) link

I listened to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lYyfv_vRGoM yesterday and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9w7-4e2stYs today. I just realized there is more than one and am glad that you shared the second link and that I came upon them in the order that I did. I guess being a musician is different from being a performer and that as in everything there is the burden and pleasure of communicating and making a living.

youn, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:23 (two years ago) link

I guess being a musician is different from being a performer and that as in everything there is the burden and pleasure of communicating and making a living.

This is true but what made this come to mind for you?

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:47 (two years ago) link

introducing a work to an audience; talking during performances

youn, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:50 (two years ago) link

program(me) choices

youn, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:55 (two years ago) link

If you're watching Daniel's videos, he just shared this, where he plays electric guitar with Naoko Tsujita on marimba on a piece by David John Roche. It's a fun piece, actually preserving the catchiness and rhythmic energy of riff-based rock in its fusion:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Txuh2NIx934

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 03:19 (two years ago) link

(Thanks. I think there is also the joy of expression, the movement and the sound, why there are jazz clubs and festivals and raves and afternoon concerts and listening to rehearsals. Marimba goes surprisingly well with electric guitar.)

youn, Thursday, 23 December 2021 01:16 (two years ago) link

Why are the violin and piano favored? Does anyone know?

youn, Thursday, 23 December 2021 22:49 (two years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XH-z6wXqB-s

(For the piano, perhaps just for the acoustics as for the electric guitar in the late 20th century?)

youn, Friday, 24 December 2021 22:03 (two years ago) link

Thanks. I think there is also the joy of expression, the movement and the sound, why there are jazz clubs and festivals and raves and afternoon concerts and listening to rehearsals.

Yeah, the live performance, the act and practice of playing, is largely the thing with classical (although obv there is Gould, audiophile collectors, etc).

As for the piano and violin, before checking any history books, I can say both instruments project powerfully in a hall, esp if you're comparing to a classical guitar. The piano gives you almost the full range, in pitch, of an orchestra, at least closer than any other single acoustic instrument does, and a p much unparalleled ability to play multiple parts at the same time. Although it is quite limited in terms of range when it comes to timbre or articulation, as harmony and counterpoint became privileged in European music, the piano is probably the most powerful solo instrument from those points of view. The violin otoh does allow a great deal of expressive range wrt timbre, articulation, and dynamic expression, with no frets to block sliding between pitches, and allows for great sustain as long as the player keeps bowing, so is a powerful lyrical melodic instrument. The classical guitar is soft and has little sustain and has been traditionally relegated more to the status of a household or parlour instrument - otoh, it gives a balance of allowing for greater polyphony than the violin while allowing for greater timbral and expressive range than the piano, as well as a history with Spanish folk traditions.

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Tuesday, 28 December 2021 23:44 (two years ago) link

has been traditionally relegated more to the status of a household or parlour instrument

(I was also thinking of European predecessors to the guitar - lute, Baroque guitar, etc)

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Tuesday, 28 December 2021 23:59 (two years ago) link

Some notes from Nicolas Meeùs's article on the keyboard in Grove Music Online:

The keyboard probably originated in the Greek hydraulis, but its role in antiquity and in non-European civilizations appears to have remained so limited that it may be considered as characteristic of Western music. Its influence on the development of the musical system can scarcely be overrated. The primacy of the C major scale in tonal music, for instance, is partly due to its being played on the white keys, and the 12-semitone chromatic scale, which is fundamental to Western music even in some of its recent developments, derives to some extent from limitations and requirements of the keyboard design...

By the beginning of the 14th century, however, the development of polyphony had caused a widening of keyboard compass and the progressive addition of chromatic keys...

The most common keyboard compass in the second half of the 15th century and the first half of the 16th century was from F to a″, often without F♯ or G♯. In Italy, upper limits of c‴ or even f‴ were common. The instruments reaching f′′′ were perhaps made at a lower pitch standard. The low limit was extended to C, often with short octave, in the 16th century. From then, the compass of string keyboard instruments increased more rapidly than that of the organ, as the latter had a pedal and octave stops that made a wide compass less necessary. However, organs with a ‘long compass’ keyboard, extending below C, were common in countries which had a tradition of single-manual organs, e.g. England and Italy from the 15th to the 18th centuries. Harpsichords reached five octaves, usually from F′ to f‴, about 1700. Pianos attained six octaves, often from F′ to f‴′, by 1800 and seven octaves, from A″ to a″″, by 1900. Pianos now usually cover seven octaves and a 3rd from A″ to c″″′ and some reach eight octaves. Modern organ keyboards rarely cover more than five octaves.

In the 18th and 19th centuries keyboard instruments gained a leading position in European musical practice. This led to attempts to provide all types of instrument with a keyboard mechanism. The most successful of these attempts were the harmonium and the celesta, and very many of the electric and electronic instruments produced in enormous numbers since the 1930s are controlled by means of a keyboard

From A History of Western Music (Burkholder/Grout/Palisca):

Ensemble music [ in the mid-18th century ] was written for numerous combinations. Very common were works for one or more melody instruments, such as violin, viola, cello, or flute, together with keyboard, harp, or guitar. When the latter play basso continuo, they serve as accompaniment to the melody instruments. But whenever the keyboard has a fully written-out part in the chamber music of the 1770s and 1780s, it tends to take the lead, accompanied by the other parts. The reason for this dominance lies in the role this music played in domestic music-making among middle- and upper-class families. The daughters were often skilled performers at the keyboard, since music was one of the accomplishments they were expected to cultivate, while the sons - typically violinists and cellists - devoted less time to practice. Therefore an evening's entertainment required works that would highlight the woman's greater expertise, while allowing all to participate.

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Wednesday, 29 December 2021 00:17 (two years ago) link

David D. Boyden and Peter Walls on the violin in Grove Music Online, sticking to the facts, clearly (I'm listening to a Carnatic violinist rn so they have something of a point wrt its dissemination globally):

The violin is one of the most perfect instruments acoustically and has extraordinary musical versatility. In beauty and emotional appeal its tone rivals that of its model, the human voice, but at the same time the violin is capable of particular agility and brilliant figuration, making possible in one instrument the expression of moods and effects that may range, depending on the will and skill of the player, from the lyric and tender to the brilliant and dramatic. Its capacity for sustained tone is remarkable, and scarcely another instrument can produce so many nuances of expression and intensity. The violin can play all the chromatic semitones or even microtones over a four-octave range, and, to a limited extent, the playing of chords is within its powers. In short, the violin represents one of the greatest triumphs of instrument making. From its earliest development in Italy the violin was adopted in all kinds of music and by all strata of society, and has since been disseminated to many cultures across the globe (see §II below). Composers, inspired by its potential, have written extensively for it as a solo instrument, accompanied and unaccompanied, and also in connection with the genres of orchestral and chamber music. Possibly no other instrument can boast a larger and musically more distinguished repertory, if one takes into account all forms of solo and ensemble music in which the violin has been assigned a part.

The most important defining factor of the Western orchestra, ever since it emerged during the 17th century, has been the body of ‘strings’ (i.e. violin-family instruments) playing together with (usually) more than one player to a part. The violin (and violin family), however, had originated well before the 17th century – the three-string violin was certainly in existence in the 1520s and perhaps even earlier – and by the early 17th century the reputation and universal use of the violins were such that Praetorius declared (Syntagma musicum, ii, 2/1619): ‘since everyone knows about the violin family, it is unnecessary to indicate or write anything further about it’...

At the dawn of the 17th century, the violin was beginning to develop a role as an expressive and virtuoso solo instrument. New idiomatic repertory appeared at a rate which suggests an almost feverish excitement in its possibilities. Already two towns, Brescia and Cremona, had emerged as pre-eminent in the manufacture of the instrument...

If violin making was virtually an Italian preserve at the beginning of the 17th century, so too was the development of an idiomatic soloistic repertory for the instrument. It is, of course, coincidence that the greatest stile moderno composer, Monteverdi, came from Cremona – though his realization of the violin's rhetorical power and his exploration of its technical resources in such works as Orfeo (1607) or Il combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda (1624) may owe something to his origins. Works by other composers of the period also seem to be born of excitement at the possibilities of the instrument...

By the end of the century Italian violin composition had an enormous impact on English taste. Purcell three times acknowledged the importance of Italian models for his own work: in the prefaces to the Sonnata's of III Parts (1683) and Dioclesian (1691), and in the section on composition he contributed to the 12th edition of Playford's An Introduction to the Skill of Music (1694). In the 18th century London, as the largest and most cosmopolitan city in Europe, became a mecca for foreign virtuosos, many of whom (Geminiani, F.M. Veracini, Felice Giardini and Viotti) settled there at least for a time...

As a composer of violin works, J.S. Bach neglected the main genres of his age. The solo violin concertos (BWV1041 and 1042) and the concerto for two violins (BWV1043) are in the Vivaldian mould, though they far outstrip their models in musical content (especially in harmonic complexity). But with the exception of that contained in the Musical Offering there are no authentic trio sonatas involving violin, and there are just two continuo sonatas, dating from early in Bach's career. He did, though, invent new genres of his own. The six sonatas for harpsichord and violin (BWV1014–19) are the earliest such compositions, effectively trio sonatas in which the harpsichord acts as both second violin and bass. There is a significant repertory of unaccompanied violin music before Bach's (1720): by Thomas Baltzar (in
GB-Ob Mus. Sch. 573), J.P. von Westhoff (a suite for violin ‘sans basse’, 1683, and six partitas, 1696), Biber (Passacaglia, c1676) and J.G. Pisendel (unaccompanied sonata, ?1716). But nothing approaches the Bach solo violin sonatas and partitas (BWV1001–6) either for musical architecture or for a comprehensive exploration of the technical and expressive capabilities of the violin...

The four great composers of the classical Viennese School all studied the violin. Joseph Haydn did so at St Stephen's in Vienna during his childhood, and though he was to describe himself later as ‘no conjuror on any instrument’, his writing for the violin shows a player's understanding. W.A. Mozart doubtless began his instruction on the instrument with his father, whose Versuch einer gründlichen Violinschule (1756) was the most comprehensive work on violin playing yet to have been published. Mozart's abilities as a violinist were exceptional, even though after he settled in Vienna in 1781 he chose to concentrate as a performer on the piano (he continued to play the viola in informal chamber music gatherings). From 1789 to 1792 Beethoven was employed as a viola player in the Bonn court orchestra; Schubert, during his years as a pupil at the Imperial and Royal City College in Vienna, became leader of the first violins in Josef von Spaun's student orchestra. All four wrote works for violin and orchestra. The last three (K216, K218 and K219) of the violin concertos Mozart wrote in Salzburg in 1775 give cause to wonder what masterpieces might have ensued had he contributed to this genre during his Vienna years. The Beethoven violin concerto (op.61, 1806), a work driven by musical rather than virtuoso imperatives, has been a cornerstone of the repertory ever since Pierre Baillot and Joseph Joachim rescued it from near oblivion in the mid-19th century. Perhaps the greatest contribution of the Viennese composers to violin repertory is in chamber music. The string quarters of all four are of exceptional importance. In his violin and piano sonatas Mozart transformed the accompanied sonata into the duo sonata. This development was consolidated and extended in the ten great sonatas by Beethoven, whose ‘Kreutzer’ sonata (op.47, 1803) establishes a new register both technically and musically for the genre; Beethoven described it as being ‘written in a very virtuoso style like a concerto’.

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Wednesday, 29 December 2021 00:27 (two years ago) link

The chaconne has some lovely dynamic and reflective sections. Was it written specifically for guitar? I should look this up. It's as if as an antidote to mourning you took up a very complex puzzle with 1 million pieces ... Who would have that self-discipline?

youn, Saturday, 8 January 2022 18:31 (two years ago) link

No, it's the last movement of Bach's Violin Partita II in D minor (BWV1004) but it's become adapted as a virtuoso repertoire piece for classical guitarists. (A bass voice or fuller chords are sometimes added on guitar but this is one piece that doesn't absolutely need it, which is rare!) There's a v fluid Julian Bream recording. If you want to stick with Ontario, Emily Shaw did a version on Vespers from 2019 where she played it straight from the violin score.

treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Saturday, 8 January 2022 22:18 (two years ago) link


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